Wednesday, November 14, 2012

THE HOPEFUL SCENARIO FOR THE GOP IS LESS HOPEFUL THAN IT SEEMS

Andrew Kohut of the Pew Research Center thinks things aren't as gloomy as they seem for the GOP. The Wall Street Journal editorial page, naturally, is only too happy to give him space to explain why he thinks this:

A week after President Obama won re-election, two themes are dominant. First, that Mr. Obama kept his job because key elements of his base -- notably young people, African-Americans, Latinos and Asian-Americans -- turned out for him. Second, that the growing size of these voting blocs represents a decisive challenge for the Republican Party.

Both points are true, but most observers are overstating the gravity of the GOP's problem. In particular, they are paying too little attention to how weak a candidate Mitt Romney was, and how much that hurt Republican prospects.

Here is what the exit poll found. Mr. Romney's personal image took a hard hit during the primary campaign and remained weak on election day. Just 47% of exit-poll respondents viewed him favorably, compared with 53% for Mr. Obama. Throughout the campaign, Mr. Romney's favorable ratings were among the lowest recorded for a presidential candidate in the modern era....

Mr. Romney was never fully embraced by Republicans themselves, which may have inhibited the expected strong Republican turnout. Pew's election-weekend survey found Mr. Romney with fewer strong supporters (33%) than Mr. Obama (39%). Similarly, a much greater percentage of Obama supporters (80%) than Romney supporters (60%) told Pew that they were voting for their candidate rather than against his opponent....

I know the response from non-crazy Republicans is that the GOP could have won this time around with a less polarizing candidate -- a Pawlenty, a Huntsman, a Barbour, a Daniels. But that speaks directly to Kohut's second point: GOP primary voters don't like less polarizing candidates. They were thoroughly uninspired by Pawlenty. They despised Huntsman as an Obama appeaser. Barbour really isn't interested in fighting various Fox News culture battles. Daniels called for a culture war truce -- he'd never get the nomination.

I'm not saying that Republicans can't possibly find the sweet spot -- a candidate the crazy base can get behind who doesn't alienate Hispanics, single women, and others in Obama's coalition. I'm saying that the Republican nominating process seems purpose-built to winnow out anyone with broad appeal. It inspired Romney to push himself way to the right on immigration, reproductive rights, and taxing the rich. It will probably have a similar effect on anyone with broad general appeal in 2016.

2 comments:

One other potential problem for the Republicans:Obama lost parts of Appallachian states where Gore and Kerry did fairly well, by a lot - parts where Democrats have traditionally done fairly well, though increasingly less so.

In all likelihood, unless Duval Patrick ends up the Democratic Candidate, those margins will probably return closer to norm - or, at least close enough to NOT give the Republican candidate such a huge majority in those states. THEY voted for Romney/Ryan even though they hated Mitt. They probably do, however, like Ryan.

Still, that may be offset if a Hillary, or Biden, or almost any other white Democrat who is the candidate. He or she is likely to pick up whole areas that didn't vote for President Obama in either election, solely because of his color.

So, add THAT to the demographic changes, and what you said, Steve, and the picture STILL doesn't look rosy for Republicans.

Maybe not as bleak as we'd like. But the base still craves "A True Conservative."Hell, if he took on their positions like Mitt did, I think they'd nominate Hannibal Lecter if he promised to only eat the browner people.